A Handbook of Visual Methods in Psychology
Routledge (Verlag)
978-1-138-49179-3 (ISBN)
In recent years, visual research has seen a growing emphasis on the importance of culture in experience-based qualitative methods. Featuring contributors from diverse research backgrounds including narrative psychology, personal construct theory and psychoanalysis, the book examines the potential for visual methods in psychology. In each chapter of the book, the contributors explore and address how a visual approach has contributed to existing social and psychological theory in their line of research.
The book provides up-to-date insights into combining methods to create new multi-modal methodologies, and analyses these with psychology-specific questions in mind. It covers topics such as sexuality, identity, group processes, child development, forensic psychology, race and gender, and would be the ideal companion for those studying or undertaking research in disciplines like psychology, sociology and gender studies.
Paula Reavey is Professor of Psychology and Mental Health at London South Bank University, UK, and Director of Research and Education for the Design in Mental Health Network, UK. She has used a variety of visual-qualitative methods to examine lived experiences of memory, mental health and distress.
List of figures and tables
Foreword
Preface to the second edition
Acknowledgements
List of contributors
Introduction
1 The Return to Experience: Psychology and the Visual
Paula Reavey
Part I. Static media: the use of photography in qualitative research
2 Image and Imagination
Alan Radley
3 Bend it Like Beckham? The Challenges of Reading Gender and Visual Culture
Rosalind Gill
4 Using photographs to explore the embodiment of pleasure in everyday life
Lilliana Del Busso
5 Narrating Biographical Disruption and Repair: Exploring the Place of Absent Images in Women's Experiences of Cancer and Chemotherapy
Hannah Frith
6 Using photographs of places, spaces and objects to explore South Asian Women’s experience of close relationships and marriage
Anamika Majumdar
7 Reflections on a Photo-Production Study: Practical, Analytic and Epistemic Issues
Steven D. Brown, Ava Kanyeredzi, Laura McGrath, Paula Reavey & Ian Tucker
Part II. Dynamic features: social media, film and video qualitative research
8 Mental health apps, self-tracking and the visual
Lewis Goodings
9 The Visual in psychological research and child witness practice
Johanna Motzkau
10 The Video-Camera as a Cultural Object: The Presence of (an)Other.
Michael Forrester
11 Girls on Film: Video Diaries as ‘Autoethnographies’
Maria Pini & Valerie Walkerdine
12 Visual identities: Choreographies of gaze, body movement and speech and ‘ways of knowing’ in mother-midwife interaction
Helen Lomax
13 Methodological considerations for visual research on Instagram
Kayla Marshall, Kerry Chamberlain & Darrin Hodgetts
14 The big picture: Using visual methods to explore online photo sharing and gender in digital space.
Rose Capdevila & Lisa Lazard
Part III. Shared visions: opening up researcher-participant dialogues in the community and beyond
15 Visualising Mental Health with a LGBT Community Group: Method, Process, (Affect) Theory
Katherine Johnson
16 Imagery and Association in a group based method: the Visual Matrix
Lynne Froggett
17 Working with group-level data in phenomenological research: a modified visual matrix method
Darren Langdridge, Jacqui Gabb & Jamie Lawson
18 Risk Communication and Participatory Research : ‘Fuzzy Felt’, Visual Games and Group Discussion of Complex Issues
Angela Cassidy & John Maule
19 Picturing the Field: Social Action Research, Psychoanalytic Theory, and Documentary Filmmaking:
Janice Haaken
20 Moving from social networks to visual metaphors with the Relational Mapping Interview: An Example in Early Psychosis
Zoë V.R. Boden & Michael Larkin
21 Building visual worlds: Maps as a tool for exploring located experience
Laura McGrath & Shauna Mullarkey
22 Towards a Visual Social Psychology of Identity and Representation: photographing the self, weaving the family in a multicultural British community
Caroline Howarth and Shose Kessi
23 ‘I didn’t know that I could feel this relaxed in my body’: Using visual methods to research bisexual people’s embodied experiences of subjectivity and space
Helen Bowes-Catton, Meg-John Barker & Christina Richards
24 Travelling along ‘Rivers of Experience’: Personal Construct Psychology and visual metaphors in research.
Alex Iantaffi
25 Psychogeography and the Study of Social Environments: Extending Visual Methodological Research in Psychology
Alexander John Bridger
26 Tribal gatherings: Using art to disseminate research on club culture
Sarah Riley, Richard Brown, Christine Griffin & Yvette Morey
27 Sometimes all the lights go out in my head: creating Blackout the multi-sensory immersive experience of Bipolar II
Paul Hanna & Mig Burgess
Part IV. Ethical, analytical and methodological reflections on visual research
28 The photo-elicitation interview as a multimodal site for reflexivity
Tim Fawns
29 Image-based methodology in Social Psychology in Brazil: perspectives and possibilities
Arley Andriolo
30 Impressionist Reflections on Visual Research in Community Research and Action
Darrin Hodgetts, Kerry Chamberlain & Shiloh Groot
31 Polytextual Thematic Analysis for Visual Data – analying visual images.
Kate Gleeson
32 ‘So you think we’ve moved, changed, the representation got more what?’ Methodological and analytical reflections on visual (photo-elicitation) methods used in the men-as-fathers study
Karen Henwood, Fiona Shirani and Mark Finn
33 On Utilising a Visual Methodology: Shared Reflections and Tensions
llana Mountian, Rebecca Lawthom, Anne Kellock, Karen Duggan, Judith Sixsmith, Carolyn Kagan, Jennifer Hawkins, John Haworth, Asiya Siddiquee, Claire Worley, David Brown, John Griffiths & Christina Purcell
Index
Erscheinungsdatum | 25.08.2020 |
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Zusatzinfo | 3 Tables, black and white; 1 Line drawings, black and white; 100 Halftones, black and white; 101 Illustrations, black and white |
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 156 x 234 mm |
Gewicht | 1020 g |
Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Psychologie ► Allgemeine Psychologie |
ISBN-10 | 1-138-49179-9 / 1138491799 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-138-49179-3 / 9781138491793 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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